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Vancouver, Washington, was recently named the country’s “most hipster city” when it comes to tattoos, beer and other signs of “hipsterdom,” according to a London-based moving-information company. Tacoma and Spokane ranked No. 6 and No. 7, respectively.

We (No. 20 Seattle) are collectively chuckling over our flat whites while the latest indie music plays in the background.

The company, called MoveHub, studied rent inflation to measure gentrification and the number of microbreweries, vegan stores, tattoo parlors and thrift shops per 100,000 residents among the country’s 150 most-populous cities for the “U.S. Hipster Index.”

The Pacific Northwest’s concentration of such establishments is unsurprisingly high. Washington is the only state with three top-10 cities.

And with a population around 175,000, the Portland suburb measured supremely for its proportion of microbreweries and tattoo shops. And its 16.2 percent increase in rent within the past year — as part of the region’s rising housing prices — catapulted Vancouver’s score to the top.

A similar city-by-city comparison by Forbes and Sperling’s Best Places in October ranked Seattle No. 2 for its level of “cool,” determined by its restaurants, world-class museums, sports teams, good hiking and reliable mass transit — just behind San Francisco.

But apparently for skinny jeans and fixed-gear bikes, we have to travel south.

“Living in Vancouver for many years, I would have to say that 98% of Vancouverites don’t know what ‘hipster’ even means,” one commenter wrote on MoveHub.

That even included the mayor, The Columbian reported, until media outlets reported on the ranking by MoveHub, a company that gathers data to aid moving decisions, and she did the research.

“There’s no one prevailing definition, but common qualities (of hipsters) are easy enough to spot,” MoveHub says. “Hipsters are a subculture of 20- to 30-somethings who position themselves as non-mainstream pioneers; freethinkers and nonconformist conformists.”

Who knew it’s hip to not be hip.

Here is the full list:

1. Vancouver, Washington

2. Salt Lake City

3. Cincinnati

4. Boise, Idaho

5. Richmond, Virginia

6. Tacoma

7. Spokane

8. Atlanta

9. Grand Rapids, Michigan

10. Rochester, New York

11. Orlando, Florida

12. Portland

13. Knoxville, Tennessee

14. Tucson, Arizona

15. Santa Rosa, California

16. Huntsville, Alabama

17. Tampa, Florida

18. Reno, Nevada

19. Albuquerque, New Mexico

20. Seattle

Material from The Seattle Times archives was used in this report. Jessica Lee: 206-464-2532 or jlee@seattletimes.com